The Social Dimensions
[expand] The ownership of livestock created wealth inequality within communities. The families with large herds could survive bad crop years, could accumulate surplus for trade, could provide for extended…
[expand] The ownership of livestock created wealth inequality within communities. The families with large herds could survive bad crop years, could accumulate surplus for trade, could provide for extended…
[expand] The diseases that affected livestock required both prevention and treatment. The isolation of sick animals prevented spread to healthy stock. The quarantine of new animals before integrating them…
[expand] The wolves that killed livestock created ongoing tension between pastoralists and predators. The shepherds and herders developed various defense strategies—keeping animals close to settlement at night, using livestock…
[expand] The breeding of mountain horses emphasized sure-footedness, endurance, and cold tolerance over speed or size. The horses that could safely navigate narrow trails, that could carry loads up…
[expand] The larger animals required better pasture and more shelter than small ruminants, limiting their utility in highest mountain zones but making them valuable in valleys and lower slopes…
[expand] The small ruminants were ideal mountain livestock because they could navigate terrain too steep for cattle, could survive on vegetation too sparse for larger animals, and required less…
Mountain-Adapted Livestock The animals that thrived in mountain conditions were not the same breeds that flourished in lowland pastures. The harsh climate, the steep terrain, the sparse vegetation, the long…